Trump, Iran Coordinated
De-escalation… for Now
January
17, 2020
The stepping back from the
brink of war last week seems to have been achieved by the Trump administration
and Iran both working together behind the scenes to coordinate a face-saving
de-escalation. Both sides knew war would be disastrous and balked. At least for
now.
Iran’s barrage of ballistic
missiles on two U.S. bases in Iraq in the early hours of January 8 was more a
symbolic show of defiance by the Islamic Republic than any serious attempt to
inflict American casualties.
What’s more, the Iranian
attack seems to have been carried out with a level of U.S. connivance in order
to give Trump an off-ramp from all-out war, while assuaging Iranian hardline
demands for revenge over the American assassination of iconic General Qassem
Soleimani.
Following the U.S.
drone-killing of Quds Force commander Soleimani on January 3 in Iraqi capital
Baghdad, Iranian political and military leaders were vowing to inflict massive
bloodshed on American forces. When the revenge attack came on January 8, the
results were evidently scaled back. Over a dozen missiles hit two American
bases but there was not a single U.S. casualty. It was a deliberate off-ramp
from war.
Recall too that Trump had
made some extreme threats prior to the Iranian attack in which he warned that
if Iran hit U.S. personnel or assets in the region, he would retaliate with
crushing force. The arrival of six nuclear-capable B-52 bombers reported on January 6 on the Indian Ocean island of Diego
Garcia appeared to be part of Trump’s threat.
In the end, Iran it, it
seems, was permitted to strike the U.S. bases in Iraq with impunity, thus
claiming to have carried out a direct attack on American forces. That was quite
a remarkable thing to do, to hit U.S. bases. But, with no loss of American
lives, Trump was permitted to respond with (surprising) leniency, and with a
tone of triumphalism that Iran was “standing down”.
Hours after the Iranian
missile attack, Trump held a press
conference at
the White House. The sense of relief in his opening remarks was palpable. War
would not be happening after all, despite his earlier bellicose statements
threatening Iran.
The president said: “I’m
pleased to inform you, the American people should be extremely grateful and
happy. No Americans were harmed in last night’s attack by the Iranian regime.
We suffered no casualties. All of our soldiers are safe, and only minimal
damage was sustained at our military bases.”
Trump added: “Our great American
forces are prepared for anything.
Iran appears to be standing
down, which is a good thing for all parties concerned and a very good thing for
the world. No American or Iraqi lives were lost, because of the precautions
taken, the dispersal of forces, and an early warning system that worked very
well.”
When Trump said American
forces “are prepared for anything” that was his typical blustering,
self-congratulatory style. Because, arguably, it was the Iranians who had
actually helped the U.S. forces be prepared to take shelter ahead of the
missile launch.
That may seem like a bit of
a stretch. Trump and his arch-enemy Iran working together to de-escalate?
But think about it. What are
the chances of zero U.S. casualties if the Iranians had been really intent on
exacting harsh revenge for General Soleimani’s death?
There were reports that the
missiles used were liquid-fueled warheads, not more deadly solid-fueled models
that Iran has in its ballistic arsenal. Several of the missiles missed their
targets, and did not explode on impact. Those munitions which did reach the two
U.S. bases hit empty hangars or waste ground within the base perimeters. At Ain
al-Assad base in western Iraq – the largest U.S. base housing 1,000 soldiers –
troops were safely out of harm’s way.
Note how Trump said in his
address that no lives were lost “because of dispersal of forces and an early
warning system that worked well”.
That suggests the U.S. was
given ample warning by the Iranians to make sure its forces were bunkered down.
Several media reports claimed that Pentagon officials had advanced
warning of the impending Iranian attacks. The warning was not due to American
intelligence beating the Iranian strike plans. Rather, it is contended here,
the warnings were from the Iranians themselves.
We can surmise this
communication took place through the Iraqi government which was alerted to the
attacks several hours before by Iran, or through Swiss authorities who act as
an unofficial conduit between Washington and Tehran. U.S. media reports said there was an uptick in Iranian
communications to Washington through the Swiss embassy in Tehran. The message
being conveyed was that the missile strikes on the U.S. bases were a one-off
retaliation, not a beginning of escalation. Also, it was understood by U.S.
officials that the strikes were not intended to cause deaths.
Going back to the dramatic
day of General Soleimani’s killing on January 3, it was reported then, but not
widely, that Iran had received communication from the U.S. only hours after the
deadly drone attack.
Ali Fadavi, Rear-Admiral of
the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, claimed the U.S. requested the Iranians to take
“proportionate revenge”. The claim was reiterated later the same day by Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif who said, “Switzerland’s envoy
transmitted a foolish message from the Americans this morning”.
Fadavi, the IRGC commander,
was quoted as scoffing at the American proposal for a limited Iranian
retaliation strike – a strike which essentially would be for show, not for war.
“The Americans must await severe revenge. This revenge will not be limited
[for] Iran,” he said.
However, in the light of the
limited, bloodless Iranian strikes on the two U.S. bases in Iraq that looks
like what exactly ensued. The Iranians decided to work with the Trump
administration to find a way back from the brink of war.
Trump’s order to kill
General Soleimani was typical of his erratic, impetuous decision-making. It was
likely done, as Tom Luongo argues, for macho display to appease hawkish Republicans
over the impending impeachment trial, and without Trump realizing the enormity
of the consequences.
Thus, Trump had suddenly
found himself on the path to war which his big mouth was making all the more
precipitous. Iran had also joined the path to war by furiously talking up
revenge for Soleimani. But in the end, both sides knew they couldn’t afford an
all-out war. The Iranians decided to take the American offer of deploying
symbolic strikes – and, in that way, allowed both sides to save face.
The trouble is though,
Trump’s unhinged hostile rhetoric towards Iran suggests that the off-ramp from
war is only a temporary pause.
Finian CUNNINGHAM
Former editor and writer for
major news media organizations. He has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in several languages
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